For a long time now, I have been very interested in information or
otherwise being that guy with access to the information. Perhaps it’s from
watching the news every night when I was younger, or maybe I just watch too
many spy movies.

Regardless, I am fascinated with how news is gathered, re- ported and
the variety of methods in the ways it is brought to the public. It seems now
the stars have aligned with the growing influence of the Internet and the rise
of social news websites like Digg, Slashdot and Delicious.

People, including myself, are now able to get their information fix in a
wide variety of ways, as well as participate in the information gathering
process by submitting news stories, images and videos to these social news
websites. Furthermore, people are able to get their information at a much
faster pace that the traditional media outlets, like CNN or NBC.

For instance, there is an upstart news wire service called
@BreakingNewsOn that relies on the rapid- fire speed of the micro-blogging web
service Twitter to “tweet” out breaking news stories, most of the time much
sooner than any other major news outlet. In journalism, the ability to get that
breaking news story out the quickest is a fundamental element that makes this
field so competitive.

With this new uprising of social media and the Internet as a platform
for information and news, these traditional media are scrambling for a way to
be included in this new trend and not be left behind in the Internet’s dust.
Big media organizations have begun to experiment with social news and citizen
journalism to try to compete, and they have so far been somewhat successful.

Perhaps the most notable new form of citizen journalism is CNN’s
iReport, in which users participate in submitting news stories, eyewitness
videos, photos and other first-hand accounts of news as it happens. CNN iReport
has been largely successful, with submissions of the Virginia Tech shooting and
I-35 bridge collapse in Minnesota among the first re- ports of events.

Citizen journalism is not a new phenomenon in the world of news media.
The modern citizen journalist movement began in the late 1980s when a large
number of journalists became disillusioned, as did the general public, with the
established news media. The establishment of citizen journal- ism was defined
by its purpose to have journalism that was for the people. Today, citizen
journalism is still going strong with the birth of blogging, allowing anyone
with access to the Internet to publish whatever they want, and with that,
report on things that they witness and experience.

However, citizen journalism is not without its inherent risks, namely,
reporting on false stories. Anyone with a camera or an eye- witness account can
now suddenly become a journalist. For instance, the story of the infamous
Rodney King video was broken not by a traditional news reporter, but by a
passerby who happened to have a camcorder and recorded the event, later
spreading it into the traditional news scene.

One might think that citizen journalism is great, and I have to agree
most of the time. It allows the people who actually experience the events that
the news covers to document and share that experience with everyone else.
However, the risk of the “system” being taken advantage of is high.

Case in point: the recent report a few weeks ago on CNN’s iReport of
Apple’s CEO Steve Jobs being rushed to the hospital for a heart attack. The
report, which was later found to be completely unfounded and downright false,
was submitted to the iReport web- site merely claiming that the story’s
submitter knew an “insider” who stated that Jobs was rushed to the hospital
displaying symptoms of a heart attack.

The story was quickly picked up by multitudes of blogs and as a result
caused Apple’s stock price to plummet with investors fearing the worst. Much
later, CNN retracted the story after the rest of the iReport community claimed
it was false. Apple had to make an official statement refuting the rumor, and
the Securities and Exchange Commission is even investigating the report’s
submitter claiming that he purposefully tried to decrease stock prices.

This is a prime example of the fact that, while the
vision and execution of citizen journalism works the majority of the time, the
risk remains of major catastrophes from false reporting. This is some- thing
that needs to be controlled.

I’m
pretty sure most of you reading this newspaper have heard of Twitter by now,
but for those uninitiated few, Twitter is an online “microblogging” service
that let’s users post brief messages called “tweets” with a maximum of 140
characters.

Why
140, you ask? Well, that’s the character limit for a standard text message on a
modern mobile phone. The purpose of the short and simple approach is that at
any given time you will have your mobile phone with you and can text out to
Twitter what you’re doing.

Sure,
with an initial glance at Twitter, the concept seems really dumb. Why would
anyone care what I’m doing now, and do I really want anyone to know these
things? I think the answer to this question is largely a generational thing.
Look at the demographic of Twitter or social networking as a whole. The large
majority of these users are typically quite young—somewhere around the 16-35
age group; most have used a computer for the majority of their lives.

The
personal computer explosion began in the late 1970s and early 1980s, and has
grown exponentially from there. The people of the information generation are a
lot more comfortable with computers and seem to embrace the many things, no
matter how seemingly strange or completely random, the Internet and computers
can provide. So, it comes at no surprise that someone like myself—and four to
five million other users—have embraced Twitter.

Going
back to the question of why anyone would care about what I’m doing, the answer
is, “Why not?” The whole point of social networking is to meet, connect and
socially interact with other people. By posting little snippets about your day,
like that cool movie you just saw or that totally awesome restaurant you just
went to, other people could find that interesting or find out something that
they didn’t know before.

One
could, from reading your tweet, go look up more information on that movie or
restaurant that they wouldn’t have otherwise known about. It’s about sharing
experiences, both the good and bad. There’s something inherent in the new
information generation that compels us to want to share things with people.

Twitter
turned three years old in March this year, and it has been getting a lot of
press time lately—literally. For instance, CNN anchor Rick Sanchez tweets from
his desk on air. The media exposure has increased Twitter’s popularity
dramatically to the point that members of traditional media and older
generations are embracing it.

Yes,
my mother has joined and is following me on Twitter. I doubt my grandmother
will follow suit, though, as she’s still confounded by my mother’s profile on
“Facepage.” One consequence of Twitter’s explosion into the mainstream is the
increasing numbers of older people asking about Twitter and what it is. At
least now I can show them this article and get back to my “Internetz.”

Not
only has Twitter grown simply in the number of users, but it is also becoming a
completely new form of communication. This is perhaps the most exciting feature
of Twitter for me. I am able to follow newswire services, which in many cases
lets me get breaking news many minutes before other news outlets. Want to know
right now what’s going on in the world? Head over to Twitter. I also can follow
different websites that update Twitter whenever there’s something new to check
out on the site. It’s also a great way to find fun and interesting things on
the Internet through people posting links in their tweets.

There’s
also a way for Twitter to function like a wide open chat room discussion on
popular topics or events with the use of “hash tags,” which are denoted in a
person’s tweets by a pound sign followed by a keyword. The search function of
Twitter is then able to track these keywords and show related users who are
also tweeting about it. The possibilities of what people can do with Twitter
are astonishing. Go give it a Google and see what you find.

So when someone asks you what’s the point of Twitter,
answer back that it’s a new Internet-based communication network where friends
and other people can share information. If he or she still doesn’t get it just
show him or her this article, perhaps that might help. However, if by some
chance, the person just can’t grasp this darn thing, just give a small chuckle,
and say: “It’s just the Internet, grandpa.”

Project
ReNeWal, a domestic violence shelter and resource center that serves Rockdale,
Newton and Walton counties, will host their annual Project ReNeWal
Classic charity golf tournament on Oct. 29 at The Oaks Course in Covington. The
event begins with a lunch at 11 a.m., with the tournament teeing off at 1 p.m.

The
team golf tournament aims to raise money for the organization to continue
providing domestic violence support and services to the community. Last year,
the organization provided over 14,000 individual services, sheltered 410 people
and answered over 2000 crisis calls from the tri-county area.

"We've
been doing the golf tournament since 1995," said Vickie Stevenson,
Executive Director of Project ReNeWal. "It's a major fundraising
event."

In
the past, the organization's golf tournament has been very successful at
collecting donations and sponsorships for the event. However, this year,
primarily due to the tight economy, the organization is struggling to meet
their expectations.

"It's
been quite slow. It's the economy. A lot of businesses that have donated in the
past don't exist now," Stevenson said. "We have a much larger
committee this year trying to get sponsors."

There
are a variety of levels of business sponsorship for the tournament. A four-person
team sponsorship with recognition on the scoreboard is $400 per team. Bumping
up to the Gold Sponsor for $1000, adds additional recognition on the
registration banner and scorecards. There are also sponsorships for $100 for a
sign per hole, as well as a $50 scoreboard sponsorship.

Project ReNeWal is a
non-profit organization, and as such donations may be tax deductible.

The
Rockdale Magnet School for Science and Technology has been awarded the
prestigious DifferenceMaker award by
the Alliance for Student Activities for being the top community service high
school in the United States.

In
a service project spearheaded by the Magnet students themselves, both students
and faculty competed in a food drive project that enabled the Rockdale Food
Bank to remain open in a time of dire need.

The
Food Bank was facing temporary closure right before the Thanksgiving holidays
due to the massive demand. Students learned of the food bank’s predicament
during the initial food drop-offs. The original goal was to donate around 500
cans of food. Upon learning of the food bank’s situation, the students rallied
and donated around 1,600 cans of non-perishable food by the end of the
month-long drive.

"I
think it was the first time that Magnet as a community came together across all
grade levels and families to do a meaningful, community, backyard service
project," said Susan Gary, a science teacher at the Magnet School.

The
project involved an innovative twist on the common "penny war"
fund-raising competition, where pennies earn teams points, but higher
denomination coins deduct points. Thus, the teams compete by putting more of
the "negatively-scoring" coins into their rivals' collection. For the
food drive, certain foods were designated with positive points and some with
negative points. The negatively-pointed goods were the foods that the Rockdale
Food Bank needed more. Grade-levels and faculty competed against each other to
donate food to the Food Bank.

"This
is really something that the kids came up with in the class," said Mary
Ann Suddeth, director of the Magnet School for Science and Technology. "We
started a community service class last year because we feel that this is
something that’s very important and giving back is something that we preach to
our students."

In April, the students who organized the food drive
applied for the DifferenceMaker
award, completing a rigorous application process. Months later, students and
faculty were astonished to learn that they had won. The biggest surprise came
from learning that the Magnet School topped other schools with larger projects,
such as raising $30,000.

The spread of malware, viruses and other cyber
attacks on social networking sites like Facebook and MySpace presents one of
the main emerging cybersecurity threats, according to a report issued by Tech’s
Information Security Center.

The report, entitled “Emerging Cyber Threats Report
for 2009,” outlines various forms of computer security threats that have been
increasing in occurrence and are expected to become more prevalent in the near
future. These new threats include new ways in which users’ computers can become
infected with malware, viruses and bot- nets, as well as new ways of conducting
phishing scams.

“Based on research that we do here at Georgia Tech
and friends that we have in the industry who are top leaders in this field, we
identified these major threats,” said Mustaque Ahamad, director of the
Information Security Center. “Our report is more forward-looking...like what we
can do to save face as we deal with the kinds of threats that we are talking
about.”

“Malware, basically, is software that will do bad
things if it somehow manages to get installed on your machine...it finds a
stealthy way to get there,” Ahamad said. “A lot of this is driven by the intent
to steal sensitive data that you may have.”

Another type of threat addressed in the new report
is that of botnets, which are a type of security breach to a user’s computer in
which an attacker can remotely take control of the computer. “With a botnet,
[the user’s computer] becomes part of a larger network [of computers],” Ahamad
said. These computers are often referred to as “zombie computers,” which are
taken over and used en masse with other computers for nefarious purposes.

In the early days of computers, typical security
threats did not have to be very advanced, as the idea of security protection
was minimal. However, today computer systems are more complex, and many people
have secure operating systems and use anti-virus and malware protection
software.

“The bad guys have become more sophisticated,”
Ahamad said. “They don’t try to blindly get you, but try to get to you where
you feel like it is a legitimate action.”

Herb Baines, OIT director of Information Security,
described some of the methods in which attackers utilize social networking to
conduct their schemes. “Things like ‘adspoits’ on these social net- works.
You’ll see a lot of various ads, individual ads, corporate ads, things like
that...that may have a malware hidden behind it.”

One of the characteristics of ads on social
networking sites that makes them potentially dangerous, besides having the
ability to be personalized based on the in- formation that users edit on their
profiles, is the fact that these ads link to external websites, outside the
confines of the social networking site. “All of these social networks will
allow you to click on external links [in ads],” Baines said. “In the case of Facebook,
they have done a lot to combat malware on their end, but it’s all those
external links that they have no way to police.”

One example of a recent exploit using social
networking to infect computers with malware occurred in August this year with
the Facebook “Court Jester attack,” in which over 18,000 profiles were targeted
within a 24 hour period with links posted in “wall” messages that led to the
download of malware.

OIT estimates that on a monthly basis, 10 of the
8,000 systems connected to ResNet/EastNet are affected by malware.

There are many things that users can do to protect
themselves from these risks. “Go to OIT’s website and download the free
software that is available to them,” Baines said. “Make sure your ma- chine is
up to date. Use good anti- virus software, use secure browsers, block cookies,
JavaScript and popups.”

“There is some protection on
OIT’s part,” Baines said. “However, it still comes down to the users’
awareness.”

For
those Tech students coming close to their graduation day, Tech’s Career
Services provides a wide variety of options to facilitate students at finding
the right job for them and connecting them with prospective employers.
Additionally despite the gloomy outlook on the national economy and its effects
on the job market, the job outlook for recent Tech graduates is still healthy
for the majority of majors at Tech, especially engineering and computer-related
fields.

However,
with the economy constantly slumping in the past few years, many students are
concerned about their prospects for getting a job after graduation. According
to Ralph Mobley, director of Career Services, the job market for technical
skills is still good.

“There’s
just as much recruiting [this year] as a year ago,” Mobley said.

He
advised that as the times change, the skill set favors certain fields more. At
this point in time, technical skills are a focus of employers, which Mobley
said melds well with Tech’s engineering focus. The job market for positions in
fields like investment banking or the automotive industry are weak sectors
according to Mobley, who also described the recruitment for consulting
positions as “holding up.“

The
last major decline in the job market was back in 2001.

“The
bottom fell out in the job market, and continued to go down in 2003. It’s been
on a steady climb until 2007,” Mobley said.

“We
seem to still be in a strong position. This is particularly true for many of
the industries that traditionally recruit at Tech,” Mobley said. Many
companies, such as ExxonMobil, Shell and Schlumberger, which have been typical
fare at Tech for recent graduates, are still recruiting. Additionally,
according to Mobley, many consulting companies and high-tech companies such as
Hewlett-Packard, IBM and Microsoft are still recruiting at around the same
level as a year ago.

The
job market has declined slightly in 2008, but according to Mobley, it doesn’t
seem that dramatic.

“The
[job] placement rate for new graduates is around 60 percent, and about one
quarter of graduates said they are going on to graduate school.”

According
to the Job Outlook 2009 Special Report produced by National Association of
Colleges and Employers, the projected hiring rate for the class of 2009 shows a
very stagnant level. However, there does not seem to be any indication of a
decrease in hiring compared to the 2008 rates.

“I
will note that there is a big difference between recruiting and hiring. We
won’t have a clear hiring picture for a while yet, perhaps not until January,”
Mobley said.

As for any change in the amount of students opting
for graduate school rather than testing the job market, there has not been any
evidence available yet to show a possible increase in graduate school
applications due to the current economic climate. “[In] my experience is that
grad school applications increase during tight job markets, but I don’t want to
speak for our admissions department,” Mobley said. The admissions department
was unavailable for comment at time of printing.

Despite
the new Stingerette operating hours announced earlier this semester to help
make the on-demand shuttle service more useful to students, some have found the
service to be unreliable and difficult to use in the last month, especially
around the first three weeks of the semester.

Reports
of long wait times for the Stingerette and absent dispatchers has frustrated
those students who use the service to get safely across campus after dark.

“They
rarely pick up their phones,” said Shazia Mohammad, fourth-year CHBE major. “I
tried for two hours straight around 1:30 a.m. one night and no one picked up.”
Other students, including Mohammad, recalled previous semesters with
less-than-stellar service and wait times of up to 30 minutes.

According
to the Parking and Transportation office, there are still issues with the
Stingerette shuttle service.

“We
have had a huge increase, an absolutely huge increase, in the number of people
using the Stingerette services this semester,” said David Williamson, assistant
director of Parking and Transportation

“The
increase in demand is the principal cause of people having difficulty reaching
the Stingerette dispatcher, as well as the wait times for rides,” Williamson
said.

Williamson
described that from around the beginning of August to mid-September, the
Stingerette has taken 5,825 call requests and transported 8,292 riders around
campus. These numbers represent a 42 percent increase in call request and a 32
percent increase in riders utilizing the Stingerette service. This increase in
demand for the service has put increased strain on the current ability of the
dispatchers and drivers to coordinate and schedule consistently prompt and
efficient service according to Williamson.

Current
data from Parking and Transportation shows that the Stingerette staff is able
to respond to about 50 percent of all calls for service within five minutes,
and about 80 percent of all call requests within ten to eleven minutes. At
times the number of calls exceeds the supply capacity. This is the cause of
many of the backups, delays and unanswered calls that many students have
experienced. Fortunately, the service has been getting better and more reliable
as of late, despite the increasingly heavy demand.

“The
Stingerette was not working for the first three weeks of school, but it started
back up at the beginning of last week,” Mohammad said. “They even pick up the
phone now.”

Given
that there have been changes with the Stingerette operation hours, combined
with the increased awareness toward possible criminal activity, more students
have chosen to use the Stingerette.

“Meeting
the needs of this type of growth in demand is a daily challenge for our staff,
and I would ask that riders be patient during this adjustment period,”
Williamson said.

Additionally,
many students have experienced problems with long, inconsistent wait times for
the Stinger buses, especially at the beginning of the semester. According to
Williamson there are many factors that are beyond the control of Parking. The
beginning of the fall semester is harder on the buses due to the transition
from minimal summer staff to a new full staff. The capacity is an issue with
the limited number of buses.

“We
are aware of the issue,” Williamson said. He advised that simply hiring more
busses would clog the system more.

The
current on-time performance of the bus service is at around 70 percent. “This
is not where we want to be. We want something around 80 percent,” Williamson
said.

Parking
is looking into the problem of over-capacity, which occurs when a bus is unable
to stop to pick up new riders because it is too full. The current contract with
First Transit Company, which operates Tech’s bus services, ends in a year, and
Parking is looking into getting larger busses.

There
are other options that Parking is hoping to implement to help riders use the
bus services more easily and efficiently, such as having more NextBus
interactive maps like the one at the Student Center information desk, as well
as possibly having text messaging services to find bus locations and stop
times.

You take photos, right? You put them all on your computer, and probably upload them to places like Flickr or Picasa, right? Do you feel like you’re missing something? Something physical?

An actual photograph perhaps?

This missing element is what new Bay Area startup PicPlum is aiming to fill - provide that seemingly lost satisfaction of holding and sharing an actual photograph.

The overall focus behind PicPlum is simplicity and quality in the process of printing and sharing photo prints. I don’t think there’s an easier way to make and send photo prints to yourself or a loved one. Just upload your best selection of photos and PicPlum will print and send your photos on their way. Automatically. You don’t have to do anything else. And as for quality, the printing process uses [LightJet] printers on high-quality, non-glossy-yet-non-matte “lustre” paper. The photos look great…for the most part* (more on that later).

By default, PicPlum works as a subscription service. For $7 a month, you get a batch of up to 15 prints each sent to whomever month. You can also do a pay-as-you-go plan, as well as paying a bit more each time you want to go over your monthly 15 ($1.50 for shipping and $0.50 per print).

And while PicPlum is currently focused on targeting new parents and parents with young children, it certainly applies to other people as well. I am approaching this review as a photography enthusiast that simply wants to have some lovely prints of my favorite photos that I take. (I find it quite serendipitous that the weekend I decide to experiment with and old film camera, is the same weekend that PicPlum launched.) Prints from every camera now!

And my first batch arrived in the mail today.

As described, the 4” x 6” prints came in a nice, dare I say, plum-colored envelope. Itself was protected by a stiff cardboard envelope to prevent bending. My photos arrived in ship-shape - no bends, tears or any damage.

Most of the photo prints looked fantastic. The printing process, as described, was very high quality and you can’t see any digital artifacting or dot pattern from the printer.

I uploaded a variety of photos, most being color, but I slipped in a few black and white photos as well. The black and white photos came out brilliantly. I love black and white photos, so it’s nice to find that this service is not color-only.

Now, did you happen to catch that little asterisk I wrote earlier? Yes, not all the photos looked great, unfortunately. And, good thing for PicPlum, I think the issue was more to do with they way certain photos were shot and edited than the printing process.

I had a few photos that had a pretty strong blue gradient in the sky due to the angle of the sun, as well as one photo that I added some vignetting. I think the strong gradient of these colors, the saturation level of the digital photo, and perhaps some color saturation in the printing process itself caused the printer(s) to reach it’s limit on color level graduations. That’s the best way I can describe it. Now I don’t know what printer(s) were used, so I have no way to verify this. It’s just my preliminary judgement.

( ^ digital version)

( ^ print version - disregard the dust. I never use my scanner!)

Notice how the vignetting is not a smooth gradient in the print version like it is in the digital version.

( ^ digital version)

( ^ print version)

In this comparison, notice how the blue in the sky, again, doesn’t have a smooth gradient in the print version. The print version seems a bit over-saturated.

Overall, I am very pleased with the experience and the quality of the prints, and I plan to continue to use the service for the time being. Time will tell if I continue with the subscription or bump down to the pay-as-you-use-it account. From what I’ve seen, as long as you watch how the much the saturation levels of the digital photo and how color levels change in big open spaces, such as the sky, your prints should come out looking fantastic.

Are you a budding photographer, a seasoned enthusiast or even a steady professional and need some help in your next lens purchase? Well, good news everyone! LensHerohas come to the rescue to make your lens purchasing endeavor less frustrating and confusing.

Differing from your standard manufacturer listing of lens offerings or confusing comparison charts of the vast array of interchangeable camera lenses, LensHero provides a new way to evaluate and narrow down various lens choices to help find the right one for your needs.

The process begins with some simple questions such as the brand of camera you use and the amount of money you are willing to spend. Next up, it gives you some options to choose from to help narrow down the type of lens you are looking for. You can either sort lenses based on the style of photograph you are trying to achieve, such as macro, wide-angle or portraiture, or you can narrow down your choices based on focal length ranges. For example, if you know you’re not planning on shooting bird photos, you can narrow down the focal length to exclude the super-telephoto ranges of 300mm and longer. There is also a way to get automatic lens suggestions based on the lenses you already have.

Hit the “Go” button and you presented with your list of lens choices, custom-chosen based on your preferences. You then get lens specs, reviews, prices and store options to make your purchase.

There are also ways to browse all lenses by a variety of categories, such as by manufacturer or lens mount type – why browse through a bunch of Nikon F-mount lenses if you shoot with Canon EF-mount glass?

Overall, it is a very simple yet comprehensive service that works really well to help determine which lens is right for you, your equipment and, probably most importantly, your budget. However, budget is a relative term – (they have Leica lenses on there too). So, if you have been struggling and agonizing over what lens to buy next, let LensHeroassist you. Shoot away.

Ever wonder why Apple removed support for Intel’s Atom processors in the latest update release of Mac OS X Snow Leopard (10.6.2)? Even though Apple hasn’t released a Mac that ran on Atom processors, previous builds of Leopard and Snow Leopard would boot and run on Atom machines, noticeably all those tiny netbooks floating around, like the Dell Mini 9/10. The “hackintosh” community was all over this. Now, since the release of 10.6.2, attempting to install (hack) OS X onto a machine running an Atom will simply not work (without some modding at the kernel level of the OS).

Now why would Apple do this? The first simple answer would be that it’s one way to prevent people from installing OS X non-Mac hardware. Yet, you can still install OS X onto computers running other processors. Why single-out Atoms?

Now, after Apple announced the iPad and their shiny in-house-designed A4 chip, another scenario seems to pop into mind. The A4 chip is a competitor to the Intel Atom chip - reasonably fast and super low power. Perfect for those ultra-mobile devices. Perhaps Apple-designed chips are not destined for just iPads (and next-gen iPhones)?

This article from 9to5Mac.com describes this scenario really well. I think Apple dropped support for Intel Atoms from OS X because it has no plans to have a Mac with an Intel Atom processor. Instead they will use their own chips.

How would you like to see the next generation MacBook Air running some variant of an A4 (A5?) chip with nice speed and crazy-awesome battery life? How about a similar iPad-like month-long standby time allowing you to have an “always on” MacBook Air running Mac OS X? While the current A4 is too under-powered for this, perhaps the next iteration ARM design with dual-core (Cortex A9?) capabilities will find its way in there. Who knows?